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Susan Estrich
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Birthdays

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By the time you read this, it won't be my birthday anymore. Thankfully. But it is right now, and birthdays don't get easier as you get older.

I'm not talking about mortality, although that is certainly a piece of it. I am five years older than my father was when he died. And I'm not talking about wrinkles and sore joints, although there are mornings when I wake up and ask myself what hurts before even thinking about what I have to do that day.

No, it is the sense of loss that makes birthdays harder as you get older, or at least it is for me.

I remember that my mother used to always call me every year on my birthday around the time of her labor pains. Each year, as if I couldn't remember from one year to the next, she would recount for me the circumstances of my birth — the big snowstorm, the substitute obstetrician, my grandfather's disappointment that I wasn't a boy. It has been four years since I got such a call.

I remember, even after my parents divorced and my father had married a woman who resented everything about me, that my father always found a way to take me to lunch on my birthday. Just the two of us. Our last lunch was on December 16, 1976 — a very long time ago.

But the truth is that even when I was younger, even when my parents were still alive, birthdays were always hard days for me. I would be so excited and, inevitably, disappointed.

When I had children of my own, I went overboard on their birthdays. We would celebrate for days — Disneyland, ponies, Spider-Man, laser tag, you name it.

I never got to have a friend sleep over when I was a kid, so for my daughter, I moved the dining room table into the backyard so there would be room in my little house for all her friends.

I was one of those mothers who always invited everybody in the class so no one would be slighted, as I so often was as a kid. Even so, I fretted. Did my children have a good enough time? Did the other kids? And what about the cake? One year, I went nuts about the cake. I wanted everything to be perfect. In a way, I needed those parties more than my kids did, to wipe away, once and for all, my own painful memories.

But it doesn't work that way. There is no such thing as perfect. You can't change the endings of your childhood. The most you can do is leave them in your childhood and move on as an adult.

Most days, that's what I do or at least try to do. But birthdays catch me. Birthdays overwhelm me with memories, many of them so painful that I have trouble leaving my childhood behind. I fight all day to hold on to the adult me. Writing this column is part of that fight. I tell the little girl still inside me that it will all be OK. I am grateful to be working too hard, when so many are unable to find work at all. I am grateful for the blessings of my children, and for the love of my sister and brother and friends. What more could I ask for?

Only this. What I want — and this is the adult me — is for my family and friends to be healthy and well, to find joy and satisfaction, to be strong and safe. I want what I didn't have as a child, the gifts you can't find in a store and can't wrap but in the end are all that matters.

Happy holidays.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
I will be celebtating a birthday (#74) soon. As the years go by the things I think about change. It used to be about the past and how I lived it. Now it's about my children and grandchildren and their future, whether they will live as I lived, independent, God loving and patriotic or will they have to live under the dictatorship of an oppressive, immoral government.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Early
Fri Dec 17, 2010 5:34 AM
Happy Birthday! Hope you had a blessed day.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Mike Holeton
Fri Dec 17, 2010 1:57 PM
Funny that a retired, male, conservative, O'Reily watcher like me enjoys your opinions so much. I read yours and KRAUTHAMMER's pretty much every week and, don't tell KRAUTHAMMER but I usually enjoy yours more.
While Clinton was President I used to get so upset at you and others for defending him on the news all the time but, I don't feel that way any more. I kind of like both of you now. It gives me pause when I get upset at the politics of today wondering if again I will look back on the Obama years with a different feeling, or mood, or thought or whatever it is at the moment.
Thanks for sharing your insights and experiences of life in writing and on TV. I am glad you can make a buck doing it too.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Tom
Sat Dec 18, 2010 7:12 PM
Happy Birthday, Susan. And happy holidays as well.
Comment: #4
Posted by: cadbury
Sun Dec 19, 2010 11:28 PM
Hi Susan
Happy Birthday. It is good to have another birthday. I have had 82 of them, and God willing I will have 83 come August.

You sound a little depressed. We all get that way when nostalgia grips us. And we all look back when we should look forward. Wishing you a beautiful Christmas and may the new year be gentle with you.
Comment: #5
Posted by: vonnie bates
Mon Dec 20, 2010 6:25 AM
At least you have birthdays.
Image your parents being pro-abortion like you liberals and image your arrival not being at a convenient time. Perhaps you could have been saved all those hard birthdays like the 50 million innocent babies killed by pro-choice liberals since Roe v. Wade.
The only positive about those 50 million baby murders is that I suspect most come from liberal parents and would have been liberal. Interesting thought . . . perhaps there is wisdom in Roe v. Wade.
50 million less Democrats in the US can only be a good thing.
Comment: #6
Posted by: SusansMirror
Mon Dec 20, 2010 9:14 PM
I sit here with you at my breakfast table. I tell you how I have been whining about my birthday #63 on the 23rd. As i talk and sob and recount my whole life of disappointed birthdays you sit here and listen. With each sob and each sentence I cry you nod your head. You wait for me to finish. and, right now I just opened my morning paper to see the note that you sent me. You note called "All About Birthdays". Thank you Susan, finally someone understands. As a child I never felt I mattered, even my birthday was lost. The family gathered to decorate the tree and party on that day. And, OH, by the way I think it's your birthday, right?
Comment: #7
Posted by: Catherine Wilson
Tue Dec 21, 2010 6:08 AM
Re: Catherine Wilson


My sister's birthday is on December 24th and I believe she had similar experiences with birthdays. Difficult to make a December 20 something birthday special when everyone is getting presents (how does one get an "extra" toy?). Especially back in the 50s and 60s when most parents had limited funds and kids were lucky to be getting toys of any kind . . . and to get toys on a "Christmas birthday" and Christmas, wow, you would have been rich. Today kids get more toys in one Christmas that I received during all my childhood Christmases combined. But I am not complaining, I had a great childhood . . . just commenting on the difference.


Such is why I say parents with kids who have a birthday close to Christmas, (perhaps December 1 to January 1), should let the child choose his/her birthday celebration day. Such a child might chose April 15, for example. Such a Child would get a birthday card on his/her birthday, perhaps a song, but that is about it. Then on April 15 (for our example) the Child's birthday would be celebrated with the typical party and presents. Would help prevent lots of hurt feelings for kids with “Christmas Birthdays”.
Comment: #8
Posted by: SusansMirror
Tue Dec 21, 2010 6:33 AM
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